If you're sick of reading about BTS at this point, I don't blame you. The superstar K-pop group rightfully dominated headlines this week with their new album, Love Yourself: Tear, which became the first K-pop album to ever top the Billboard 200 albums chart. The seven-piece set record sales numbers, passed several huge YouTube milestones and scored the highest Hot 100 debut ever for a K-pop group with their indelible new single, "Fake Love."

In case you've somehow missed avoided the BTS hysteria so far, here are 10 records they shattered over the past week-and-a-half. You'd best familiarize yourself with the group now, because they're not going anywhere soon.

Biggest pre-orders sales ever for an album in South Korea: Love Yourself: Tear sold 1.44 million pre-order copies in its first six days of availability in South Korea last month. BTS previously set the record with 2017’s Love Yourself: Her EP and became the only K-pop group to exceed one million pre-orders with multiple albums.

First K-pop album to hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200: It’s also the genre’s second Top 10 ever, following BTS’ Love Yourself: Her, which debuted and peaked at No. 7. The K-pop septet outsold Post Malone’s Beerbongs & Bentleys and ended the rapper’s three-week run atop the chart.

Biggest sales week and total units for a K-pop group: BTS’ latest album moved 135,000 album equivalent units in its first week, 100,000 of which were traditional album sales. The collection made a sizable streaming dent — 39.1 million streams overall — but its huge proportion of traditional sales makes Love Yourself: Tear something of an outlier among recent blockbuster albums.

First K-pop single to debut in the Top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100: “Fake Love” debuted at No. 10 on the Hot 100 this week, surpassing their former chart best, the Steve Aoki remix of “MIC Drop,” which peaked at No. 28 in December. Psy previously reached the uppermost region of the chart with "Gangnam Style" (No. 2) and "Gentleman" (No. 5), though they did not debut there.

Highest 24-hour YouTube debut of 2018: “Fake Love” earned 35.9 million YouTube views in its first 24 hours, the highest debut of 2018 and third-highest of all time behind Taylor Swift’s “Look What You Made Me Do” (43.2 million views) and Psy’s “Gentleman” (36 million views).

Highest 24-hour YouTube debut for a K-pop group: BTS crushed their own record yet again; they formerly claimed the honor with “DNA,” which earned 22.3 million views in its first 24 hours.

Fastest K-pop video to 100 million YouTube views: “Fake Love” crossed the threshold at approximately 1:45 p.m. EST on May 26, roughly eight days, eight hours and 45 minutes after its release. BTS’ former record holder, “DNA,” took more than 24 days to reach the same milestone.

First K-pop act to top the Billboard Artist 100 chart: According to Billboard, the Artist 100 chart measures “album and track sales, radio airplay, streaming and social media fan interaction to provide a weekly multi-dimensional ranking of artist popularity.” BTS is the first K-pop group to top the chart since its inception in 2014.

First foreign language No. 1 album since 2006: Classical crossover vocal quartet Il Divo last claimed the top spot with their 2006 sophomore album Ancora.

First world music album to top the Billboard 200: K-pop is also classified as world music with regard to the charts, and thus, Love Yourself: Tear charted (and peaked) on the World Albums chart. It became BTS’ sixth No. 1 on the chart, and the first world music album to ever reach the top of the overall Billboard 200.

Update: a previous version of this article said "Fake Love" was the first K-pop single to reach the Top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100. It was actually the first K-pop single to debut in the Top 10 and the third K-pop single to reach it overall.

I cover music and entertainment across as many genres as possible, but with a focus on heavy metal and hip-hop. I grew up outside Philadelphia and moved to Austin to attend the University of Texas, from which I earned a Bachelor of Journalism. I’ve spent the past five years...